wizenheimer
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We have always seemed to do well with lightly regarded O lineman
that's true, but it was more a matter of necessity than intention
all the way thru Rich Brooks --> Mike Bellotti --> Chip Kelly --> Mark Helfrich, Oregon's M.O. was to recruit lighter, rangy O-Linemen and build them into bigger mobile linemen with many all-conference selections.
I can't recall the exact stats, but IIRC for about 11 straight seasons from Bellotti to the fist couple of seasons of Halfrich, Oregon led the Pac-12 in rushing. And they did so at the same time that they had one of the lightest O-Lines in the conference. The advantage they utilized was mobility and the ability of the O-line to make initial blocks at the LOS then attack the 2nd level and initiate blocks on LB's and safeties. You always saw Duck O-Linemen further downfield, sustaining blocks than other teams' OLines. It worked great and made Oregon extremely successful....
....until the Ducks came up against big physical...and mobile....front-7's like Auburn, and Ohio State, and LSU (and even Stanford). The Ducks just didn't have enough of a mobility advantage to offset the physicality of those elite SEC-level front-7's
but all of that was making the best of a situation; and the situation was Oregon simply couldn't recruit elite OLinemen. They had to recruit 3-stars and turn them into 4-stars, and an occasional 5-star
Chip Kelly brought 2 major innovations to the Ducks. One was a spread offense that relied on a spread-power attack; the other was extreme tempo. Opposing defenses weren't prepared and they couldn't react well enough; not with just a week to prepare. A month, yes, a week, no. And those mobil OLines fit perfectly into those offenses and innovations
but more and more teams, not only at the NCAA level but the high school level, began to copy and run spread + tempo. Meaning that defenses, and defenders, became familiar with both concepts and the lightning-in-a-bottle that Chip caught at Oregon was no more
so, in a real way, it evolved backward to standard OLines. But Mario Cristobal proved that Oregon COULD recruit elite OLinemen, so that's where the Ducks are. The problem is that Oregon has not landed a single commitment from an offensive linemen that cycle. And a team need to land at least 3 every cycle. Now, part of the issue is that the current OLine class out west is one of the weakest ever. But the Ducks have missed on at least 4 OL recruits they did target. reportedly, they are still chasing a couple of 4-stars, but they are getting close to the semi-desperation of 'we-need-bodies', which is not a good place to be